Saturday, 23 November 2024

Sentencing Review 7

The new Justice Select Committee met this week, but probation didn't feature much, something that I guess we're all going to have to accept, particularly as the new government has showed little interest in our plight. All the attention remains on the failing prison part of the forced marriage and how to build more places. I couldn't be bothered to watch proceedings, but happily Rob Allen's latest blog post provides an excellent update:- 

Confidence and Supply

Much of the focus on prison reform in recent months has been on managing burgeoning demand for places. The newly formed Justice Select Committee started their examination of Prisons Minister Lord Timpson this week by asking how long the space freed up by the SDS 40 early release scheme might last.

The answer it seems is next Autumn or maybe a bit longer. That’s hoped to be enough time to create longer term sustainability in the system by putting in place whatever legislative changes are recommended by the David Gauke Sentencing Review.

But is that realistic? Even if Gauke manages to report in the Spring, his proposals are likely to be controversial. Getting them on to the statute book and then implemented could easily take another year.

The MoJ handily has a couple of further demand reduction measures up its sleeve- a change to the process of recalling released prisoners to jail in April and extending to a year the period of release on a Home Detention Curfew for eligible prisoners, from June. So they may muddle through.

But what about the supply of new prison places?

MPs heard that the new all electric Millsike Prison in North Yorkshire is on track to open in April, (although like all new prisons will surely need time to reach its full capacity of 1500). A new houseblock at Rye Hill in Warwickshire will also be ready early next year which should add 450 additional places. Timpson also said that HMP Dartmoor - closed in the Summer because of high levels of Radon- will re-open when safe, making more than 600 places available.

Prison Service Chief Amy Rees told the Committee that planning permission had now been granted for 17,000 of the 20,000 proposed new prison places. (The outstanding decision on the one remaining new build prison near Wymott and Garth in Lancashire is due to be made by mid-December).

Planning delays have added between 18 months and 3 years to the original timelines according to Ms Rees. In future, planning for prisons will be treated as Crown development with urgent procedures for reaching decisions and more in the way of permitted development on existing sites.

On the downside, Timpson revealed that 100 projects in courts and prisons were affected when construction company ISG filed for administration in September. 79 will require re-procurement.

He also acknowledged the significant shortcomings in the physical condition of the existing estate although did not put a financial cost on the backlog of maintenance. It was £1 billion in 2021.

What we do know is that there are still 23,000 cells which require fire safety upgrades. According to my calculations, the necessary work has been progressing at the rate of about 3,000 cells a year- far too few to meet the commitment to complete the work by 2027. The latest HMPPS Annual report, published last week but curiously unmentioned in the Select Committee, says reaching the target is “finely balanced in terms of the future headroom position and we are likely to require additional places out of use in future years to achieve this aim.”

More broadly, inspection and monitoring reports have drawn repeated attention to often shocking failings in infrastructure. These aren’t limited to the 25 odd prisons dating from the Victorian era. The HMPPS Annual Report revealed that in May 2024, eight sites were confirmed as containing RAAC.

HMPPS have undertaken a comprehensive survey of conditions in the prisons. I was pleased to hear Ms Rees tell the committee that the report of the survey would be published shortly particularly as the MoJ had refused my FOI request to see it.

But then according to the HMPPS Annual Report, the Final Report of the Survey was published in June 2024. It wasn’t. I have asked the Justice Committee to try to clarify the position.

Rob Allen

--oo00oo--

Like many people, I'm rapidly getting fed up with Twitter and have therefore joined the millions migrating to bluesky.

3 comments:

  1. BBC website this morning:-

    The Ministry of Justice has said it is aware of a data breach affecting prison in England and Wales.

    Confidential prison layouts had been leaked onto the dark web in the past two weeks, according to The Times, external.

    A former prison governor told the paper organised crime groups could use the information to smuggle drugs or weapons into prisons, or plan escapes.

    The MoJ said that it had "taken immediate action to ensure prisons remain secure".

    The Times first reported that prison authorities suspect that the leak may be linked to organised crime groups aiming to use drones to smuggle drug into prisons, while the blueprints could be used to evade security measures.

    The leaked blueprints are reported to include the locations of key security features, such as cameras and sensors, making it easier for criminals to bypass security or exploit vulnerabilities.

    The Cabinet Office and the Prison Service are said to be working to identify the source of the breach and assess who might stand to benefit from the stolen information.

    The National Crime Agency said it was providing support in an advisory capacity, but that it would be "incorrect" to say it was investigating the incident.

    A MoJ spokesman said: "We are not going to comment on the specific detail of security matters of this kind, but we are aware of a breach of data to the prison estate and like with all potential breaches have taken immediate action to ensure prisons remain secure."

    The leak was first flagged in an internal alert issued earlier this month, which was seen by the paper.

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  2. Building more prisons just means there's more cells to fill.
    Expanding the prison estate is nothing more then an admission of failure. The system is broken and we need a whole new approach to crime and punishment.
    Interestingly, and unexpectedly the USA seems to be cottoning on to this.

    From Inside Time.

    https://insidetime.org/newsround/world-prison-news-48/

    'Getafix

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  3. onehmpps, multiple clusterfucks and... not a single resignation or sacking of any of the 'excellent leaders'

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/11/23/britain-best-paid-inmates-earn-more-than-prison-officers

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